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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1915)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1915. 3c fC . THE JOURNAL .r - J -AM INDBi'KXtlKNT NKWSI'APKB C . JACKSOX . . . Puhllaher , fubilabva) vrtiry renlu (except Sunday 1 sod - r Huuflaf morning lit 1 bo Journal Build ; tag, Broadway and aujnHl m , Portland, or. Kotetad al ttia jjtorn:- at Portland.. Or, for , ; tFapanlaaion Ibrougb U.a walla aa aaconil ". flaa matter. , ItLtl'MOM S-Ualu 711,1, Home. A-ttu.')l. A.l 1 das-rtioouta re-cbrjfl i,y iheaa iiaruberi-. Tali i-?'1 operator "What ep-rtrrui jhj want. f KltlUSi ADVEKTISIMJ K BI'K KHlt IS l i 1 I V B Baiif ml ft Koolil ir Co.. Uruuawlrk Ulclg.. 829 fifth A.. Now York; 121- Peoulea Una BMg., Chicago. . I Subacrlptlon terma er mail or to aa ad ' rei la iha L'uliea Ktntja ur Uailco; . ; DAILY One year $5.00 0 month t -S SUNDAY tOpe fair XbO . Oua month -23 DAILY AND SUIsDAY JOoa year $T.W i On month ..I 63 America asks nothing fop her ielf but what who ha a right to 'ask for humanity itself. ' WOODKOW WILSON. The Bpan of 'life was lent for lofty duties, not for selfiah neisa: not to be whiled away in aimless dreams, but to improve ourselves and nrv mankind. Aubrey De Vcre. WHY THEY FIGHT iW HY dissemble? Why not come out in the open? Thus, BOin of those fighting the r'erriu hill de- Ifnand that the term upon which government may i.aie over tne plant at the end of the fifty years' lease he changed. This change is wanted hy the water power interests in order to give them leeway to over-capitalize the property. The business of public service and industrial cor porations in this country has large ly degenerated from making money by legitimate profits to making money, hy Inflating the capital, With watered stock. It. is a sys tem by which fortunes are made Oyer night. Witness the exposure .by t he In tertstate Commerce Commiision of Stock manipulation In the Kock Island railroad, and in the New 1 Haven railroad and the San Fran cisco.. These exposures are officlal- ly revealed and rannot be dis puted. Or note llie suit Just brought' In a Chicago court to re cover .money stolen through stock manipulations hy Rock Island di rectors. There is scarcely a public service corporation in the country in which the capital is not inflated. A change of ownership or a re organization nearly alwus means a great increase of security flota tions. It iaa process that lays heavier bnrdenH on patrons of the business. They must contribute added earn ings to pay dividends on added capital, part of which is fictitious. . It has been stated on the highest authority that the American people are thus paying dividends on II billion dollars of fiction. . The Ferris lull has been so - framed as to prevent this sort of thing In the use of water powers. That 13 one reason why the at torneys of water power corpora , tlons have assembled in Portland . to fight the Ferris bill before the water power conference. ' That Is one reason why It has been proclaimed in advance that the conference will "protest" against the Ferris bill. CAItltANZA Oil OHHFfiOX v NLY the other day a Washing-i I 1 ton disnatch Stated nnon "un-l J questioned authority" that the United States would rec ognize Carranza as the ruler of Mexico. Now it is reported, "ac cording to the admission of a ' -. cabinet member," that General . Mv.amam l . 1 . 1 - ...in. ranza and receive this govern-; - jment'B backing as the man most likely to bring peace in Mexico. , Such contradictory reports com- . ing bo ciose logei ner may ne taken tig evidence that nobody in au thority at Washington has author - Ized any statement concerning the aaminisiranon s purpose. But in View of Carranza's attitude con cerning a proposed conference be tween the warring factions, this e r,ftm in 1 . nnl V... . .. ..j.-- iv 1 ' i.aucu l J J Lilt- ' United States and South American ..republics, it is evident that Mexico .needs a stronger personality than . the "first chief" at the head of .. the republic's affairs. . Carranza rejected the peact con " ference proppsal on the ground that Jt"would Impair the indepen "', dence of the republic and establish ' the precedent of foreign interfer ence In determination of its in--.' ternal affairs." Sach a confer . ence would be of no effect. Car ranza refused to recognize the fact, as the New York Times says, that the good offices of friendly nations were proffered for the sole reason that -''the independence of the re public was already profoundly lm . paired." It is evident that the ) "first chief is a better disputant .than be is a soldier or patriot. Whether Obregon is the 6ort of man Mexico' needs remains to be; to E - seen. But it Is evident th- if he into Ae conflict remains - to- be every 48 hours. But even such a breaks with Carranza and takes a seen, Vt there is reason to believe record ought to qualify them as considerable part of th "first that tt. Teutonic drjve toward expert n a purely guessing con chief's" army with him, tit -re will Petrograd is intended for political test. be a change in the Mexican situa- j effect as well as for military ad-: : tion. It could hardly be for the vantage. Further success hy the ' Eight hundred million dollars worse. Possibly Obrevon. with the Germans in that direction might is a lot of money almost beyond backing of Villa and Zapata, might ! bring Sweden Into the list of bel-; comprehension. But according to prove worthy of recognition. i Hgerents. i Premier Asquith's estimate of ! Three hundred rears aeo Fin- $25,000,000 a day, $800,000,000 WH AT IDIOTS VK ARE! I N THE most famous pulpit in the world, one of the most fa mous preachers of the world confessed Sunday that "life long ambition for wealth and power has Finland Xhe RuS8ian3 are cred utterly crushed my life." lted ,,y the Swedes with wanting It was Henry Ward Beecher's nn i,,c.rrcII nnrt in Morwav and old pulpit in Plymouth church, Brooklyn, and the preacher was TJr Newell DwIght Hillis. He said, exi,and has made a hereditary these ambihons have brought rne,enemy of Rweden. , to the brink of poverty, and hum- Mr. shei)herd'S dispatch indicates tLiAfl Trici tin that T nni nor wnrthv , , . . . . ... . ..-v to unloose the shoe latches of poor worker in the slums. The indictment of ambition 'or tafK COuntry enter the war, Russia' in that day when wm, wearied, wealth and power" is not new. It WOuld be still further isolated from ; blood-shot eyes' the nations of Europe is only personal testimony as to a iier western allies. Finland would Iook hitherward, what kind of a bitter experience from a "rw doubtless again become Swedish : united States are they going to be BOtirco. . territory for a time at least, and;1,old? It is the human bent for riches : it is possible that Petrograd, j Are tney going to see a United that makes countless millions threatened from two 'sides, might : states, armed to the teeth, standing mourn. It is the "ambition for wealth and power" by rulers that 1 has made a cockpit of Europe and . drenched a continent in blood. The great sin of the world is i avarice. It robs a beauiliul world of much of its loveliness. There could be an existence on earth of sweetness and joy and gladness-. Nature and the Omnipotent have placed here- everything for the complete happiness of the race. The forests, the beautiful moun tains, the lovely valleys, the rivers, te birds, the changing seasons and nil the Infinite variety of delight- ri'i,ls uu lu uugauou oCi , , fill environments are an Kden if constitutional questions. To b(? adequately pr(,pared apainst mankind would only seek to make' Judge Short is attorney for the i possible attack Is the counsel of it an Eden Instead of a shambles , San Joaquin Eight & Power Com- prudence, of course, and no one quar and a cockpit of struggle. ', panv, usually known as one of leIs wlth Jt. But to be prepared up But Mammon has been lifted up the Jdjntington interests. lie also ! to the 8tandard of ,he b st military to be worshipped. There is an appears in California supreme court ! establishments of Kurope to have a idolatry of dollars. Society is a 1 reports as attorney for Lux & Mil- i landing army of ?, 000. 000 men If any maelstrom of selfish "ambition for , ler, a firm that is one of the big- j other natlon has 't; to hav a navy wealth and power." The very . gest land monopolists in the West. : of 1000 SUperdreadnaughts If any children, by the stray thoughts When there is no other sound ; other nation has It is gravely ques that drift off from the parent, are nrsiimP,lt to bring against proposed j tionabie on many sound grounds, taught that the Ultimate end and nild virt,10,ls legislation, it is the! our most rabid preparatlonists de nim of life is gold, gojd, gold. habit of corporation lawyers to i sire 6 less than this And this is And so the struggle goes on. It nn ttlp earth witj, phrieks about j not only contrary to the Ideals that crushs the weak under the jug-;tho litigation it will bring about. have alwavs guided us, but It may gemaut of ambition. The strong, ! lt is an easy arR,mlrnt to make, 1 also place us very much out of Joint comparatively few in number, drive nnd is sometimes effective. The with the times; for who knows that ruthlessly on, reckless of the con- railroad and timber interests used 1 after this war there are going to be sequences to those who have not it at ,0 ,jrant land conference to j any more great standing armies? the strength and faculties to com-. frUhten ninforrnec' and timid del- ; who knows whether the nations are pete. Strong as ho was, Newell pgatefl into acceptance of the ah- 1 going to be willing aga in to start the Dwight Hillis, famous clergyman, ' t.,irb r0SOlut ions that were adopted . colossal armament race which failed was Struck down by the chariots R,lt wiy ljtigate? The Ferris bill t so miserably to rreserve peace? and his career crushed. There is offrra ,,ower si(os to Investors on what a piece of ghnstlv humor it no check, no hindrance, no let : a Joaf!f, of f,0 ye: rs nt nominal would be if the rntted States the to the madness of the age. rental, subject to state regulation united States whi-h has hitherto ben And so, there are orphans' tears, on in,ra.Ptate btiLine-.s and federal ; eWorn to peace, should suddenly be and congested slums and the strug- , regulation on other business, ask-I come a militaristic nation at the gles of toiling women, and the ,nc. ony fhf)t thp ,,UPfI10-s ho lp,it. ' ry mnmerlt tne pet, rpady to hopelesnness and weariness and imaU, and that the law be obeyed. . abandon militarism for ever! crimes, and moans and sighs and i fs a ,)jn (o promote the use: sorrows in a world that ought to of the water i.owers and the devel-' Preparedness gets Us ordv logic be and could be a place of beauty opnu,n, of tt.e country without ! fr0m what is to com. To prepare ami ifdMii-j nu.. jj h.o...."o". What idiots and fool we are! NEW KESOl K ES E' DWIN E. PRATT, chief of the bureau of foreign and domes tic commerce, has an article in the Scientific American showing how the development of American resources has been stim ulated by the European war. Thomas A. Edison discovered that tons of benzol were going to w-aste In most of the coke plants. Mr. Edison developed a method of making phenol from benzol, and now instead of importing carbolic acid the I'nited States is producing its own. It was found comparatively easy to produce aniline from the same source. Aniline is extensively used as a coloring matter and Ameri can manufacturers formerly im- ported more than 2,500,000 pounds of lt annually, chiefly from (ler many. Mr. Pratt says the Edison works will soon be producing ani line at the rate of 2,000,000 pounds a year. Progress has been made in the manufacture of coal tar dyes, of which we formerly Imported ?10, 000,000 worth a year. Mr. Pratt says American facilities for mak- ,owe(1 to )he ,ofter what wouId ing these dyes have been greatly Jerome of a wife's chief function1 increased and now there is promise reforming her husband? that a fairly complete coal, tar . ' chemical Industry will be estah-; jr weddings in the cupola sur lislied in the I'nited States. mounting the capitol .:ome at Pa- Attention is being given to the em become the style the state country's need of potash salts fori my be asked to maintain the place compounding fertilizers. Before as a public utility, keeping on the war we imported J1 6.000.000 band a supply of orange blossoms, worth of these salts annually, but riCe and old shoes, the supply has been cut off. Now plans are being made for utilizing President Hibben, of Princeton the great kelp beds in the Pacific, university, says there is too much and Mr. Tratt declares that in , intellectual pampering of college ft year or two the United States students; work is made too agree may be able to fertilize its farms able for them. But if it were not, with American potash exclusively. how much work would be done in SWEDEN AM) THE WAR SHEPHERD, W ILLIAM G. united press war corres- pondent, says Rritons are almost convinced that Sweden will shortly become an ally . good tneir promises it should be '"aimed, a long, long time before It of Germany. He has disclosed an : possible for an ordinarily active oan aain convinre the pwrlPS that interesting situation which may pPrson t0 save enough on purchases Mars ls pod aml he"uU him ther' result in Sweden abandoning neu- , t0 meet the trip's expenses. ,isno other, trality and taking up arms against ; ts Russia. Scientists some time ago an- T"e da' of the Unilcd States is at Germany has cultiv: ted Sweden's ' nounced that Mount Lassen had hand, but it is dearly not a day of Inherent suspicion of Russia, and ceased its volcanic activities, but : arms: it is a day of universal aid. as a result it is Raid the Swedes last Saturday there was another ur ltme to Prerare TCitn arms was have cooled toward a Scandinavian bi eruption. When wise men when all the nations were most per union designed to safeguard neu- i make mistakes there is hope for i fectly prepared and in their proudest tral rights. Sweden has barred the rest of ns. ! strength. But none are prepared to ner territory to the shipment of 1 - ' day. and such preparations as they war supplies destined for Russia and has revived a' feeling of dis- trust toward tne czar's government, Whether Sweden can be brought land and the adjoining provinces to the south, including the land where Petrograd stands, were Sw;edish possessions. But Peter the Great took the Baltic prov- . . Alpvanripr , ar.miired eDough Swedish territory to give I access to it. Russia's desire to! mat oermany nas oeen partly sue- cessful in playing upon Sweden's fear of Russia. Should King Gus- ! fall A BOGIS ARGUMENT EART breaking predictions and dolorous prognostica tions of litigation to follow enactment of the Ferris bill are loudly voiced by the water power owners and their lawyers. Judge Short, of California, is one of these. Ilis arrival in Port land was signalized by an inter- view in whioh he predicted stagna Iion to ,,e brought about by the permitting Inflation. speculation ' ii. nnl monopolization of resources is wise. To prepare for what my closely allied with human welfare. : never com Is waste. The whole if, as they say. the water power 5 question and method of preparedness Interests want use of the water s dependent en a reasonable expec powcrs and development of the , tatlon. And in the light of this ter ronntry, why the threat to litigate? j rjbie satiety of blood which the na if in good faith in their pro- tions ere wenrily wading tlirough fessed desires for use and develop- j and praying for deliverance from, ineiit. why would they prevent use I which is it most reasonable to ex and development by litigation over pect in the future war or peace? tbe governments perfectly reason- able and perfectly feasible plan for a perfectly legitimate water power business? 1 The threat of litigation Is a con- : fei-sion of the weakness of the position Of those fighting the Fer- ! ris bill. j Employes of the street cleaning department who were compli mented Sunday night at Calvary Presbyterian church for their work In keeping Portland a clean city, ! ;: received deserved praise. Even the ' city administration's severest crit-l irs admit that the streets are prop erly cared for. Girls are told by a Portland pastor to marry only men who are worth while morally, spiritually, intellectually and physically. It mav be nood advice, but if fol- ' some of the larger colleges? : The Journal's Round-Up special train will leave for Pendleton Thursday night at 1 1 : 3 0 o'clock. It T-m not interfere with Dollar Day ' ,-n Portland, and if merchants make The London Chronicle has been keeping tab on the war "experts and finds that they contradict 1 themselves on an average' once wuld last Britain alone only 32 da's applied toward meeting all expenses of the war. PREPAREDNESS IN ITS RELATION TO PEACE From the Detroit News. f HIS war la going to end one day. Victor and vanauished are Koing . ., . d,solation tnev have made to thVnk. -n t face the most (.olossal task of rehabmtation that man has ever fa(Pci. They are going to jook around the world for such symnathv and hpln as thpv mav find. on their coasts, shouting a challenge? saying:, "We heard you want a fight; come on!" Or are they going to see a United States with all tne armament of peace and all the munitions of pros perity and all the arts of healing and plenty mobilized for the help of the nations? That is one sMe of the question of preparedness which is not receiving I as much attention as It deserves. nor as much thought as we will have to give It when the war ends one day. for what mav be reasonably expected Ts It reasonable to expect war? Is there any nation in Kurope even those nations which a year ago were most military-minded that desires moro war? Is there any nation in Europe today that looks other than lonringly upon peace? Do they not au nerve themselves to their now jaded efforts by the thought that the end of this war will insure their lasting peace? Wrhat, if, while all the rest of the world Is praying and preparing for the Unlted states alone should De found preparing for war? Can you conceive any more miser able miscarriage of national energy than that would be? Wre must, of course, prepare for what is coming. But we .mist use oir best judgments and accurately discern the signs of the times to per ceive what is coming. I'nprepared ness istA condition in which no in dividual or nation likes to be found. But if unpreparedness for war Is to be so passionately condemned, what are you to say of a nation that Is unprepared for peaCe? To he un prepared for peace is to be unpre pared for progress is to be left be hind In the next cosmic forward movement toward a higher civiliza tion. This is a side of the question that has been shamefully neglected by . ,, .... . the "organs of public opinion, and upon its own merits It deserves more thought than it has received. One may displace idealism with the cold est practicality and still discern that the immediate imuie oi r.urupe aim worlQ 18 u,al lau"r 01 "tun" "ruction which can only be pursued In peace. Even if the war spirit survives this suicidal attack it has made on itself, it will lie a long time i have left are being rapidly swept away. No nation will emerge strong from this conflict; the oceans of blood that they have 1 Jst and the centyrles of , orrow that they have lived through this past twelve-month, have weakened them to inoffenslve ness. The day of the United States Is at hand, but lt is not a day of chal lenge; lt Is a day of assistance. We shall be needed with all our clear sight and all our clean hands and ail our freedom from prejudice to help to give the battered nations a fair etart toward life again. We cannot do that in a military spirit. We shall be hindered la doing that if we go out in the strength of equal armies and navies. It will be no honor to us to have turned all our wealth and energy in to systems cf wholesale murder, and if we do that it will not argue our friendship for those whom we would ! help. Our appearance before the nations when this war shall have ended must be in full accord with our cherished traditions of peace. Instead of these battered nations having impressed their militaristic ideas on us and in the very twilight of militarism, too! we must Impress our ideals of peace on them. There has never been so propitious a time for this as will come when this war Is ended, and all the bruised and bleeding belligerents turn for help to some nation that has kept the faith. Let us be prepared, by all means. But let us be prepared for what is coming. And lt Is a world-wide de sire for peace that is coming. OUTWITTED By EDWIN MARKHAM v He drew a circle that shut me out Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout; But Love and I had the wit to win; We drew a circle that took him in. The above bit of verse by Edwin Markhain, the famous poet, has just come to light. Mr. ilarkham is a na tive of Oregon, his birthplace being Oregon City. Letters i-rom the People (Cummunlcatioua seat to The Journal for publication lu this department ahould be writ ten on onlj oce sida of tee paper, ahould Dot mei'ii oUO jvurds in leogtb and must be ac companied hy tee name and addreaa of the acuUer. lt the writer does uot deaire to bava il: uime published, he should ao aiate.) Discussion la the greatest of all reformer. It rationalizes everything H tou.jhea. It roba principles of all fule aaurlitj and throws them bink on their reasonableness. If they have n reasoiiatileueaa, lt rutkirnaly crusbea tbein out or existence and sets np Its owu couoahlonj La meir Head." Woodruw Wiiaon. Intrepretation Called For. Giants Pass, Or., Sept. IS. To the Editor of The Journal I have been reading with a great deal of Interest everything pertaining to the suit ln fcituated by the government for for feiture of t lie O. it C. grant lands. There seems to he a difference of opinion as to the meaning of the judgment rendered by the supreme rourt. I am no part of a lawyer, but the wildest idea that I have heard is from Attorney Dunne, who ap peared in the case for the railroad com; any. He takes the ground that the equity of $:.D0 per acre meant the soil alone and that the timber thereon was in addition. Why he did not claim ail mineral as well 1 can not upiii r.Mand. Would it be unreasonable for con gress to pass au art to siibrnit tho language of the judgment to the same court in session, and ask it to in terline each section with explanation of Its meaning where there seems to be any chance for ambiguity, with language so plain that a wayfaring man though a fool need not err there in, and have it printed in the lan guage of the original and so marked, and the interlining also marked, as explanation of the foregoing section? This could not be construed In the light of anything like criticism and any court capable of rendering a de cision Is certainly capable of ex plaining its own language. To my mind this would be the short tut to end the whole matter. J. M. CHILES. The Case of Commandant Elder. Albany, Or.. Sept. IS To the Edi tor of The journal I am certainly greatly pleased with the continued and. vigorous protest The Journal is mak ing against the removal of Command ant Klder from the Soldiers' home at Roseburg, Oregon. During the session of the Oregon state grange, held i:i May. 101::, in IJoseburg, I visited the home o-ne day and took dinner with the "boys," a very substantial and enjoyable spread. I found Mr. Elder a perfect gentleman, and not one word of complaint did I hear as to his character or adminis tration. Several times during the years since then I have met in Albany some of the old soldiers from the" home and never a word of complaint or criticism did they utter. Taking it all in all. lie is the right man In the right place, and I eay it's a burning shame that he should be turned out, and on partisan grounds, as we believe. His successor-to-be is no doubt a worthy man, hut that is not all. High praise to the citizenship of Roseburg who petition for the. retention of Mr. Flder. I predict that this seemingly lnex- j disable action will adversely affect j the success of the" Republican party i in Oregon in lf'lfi, when coupled with other t R,,ts o some Republioan ! officials, and events that are quite certainly yet to transpire. Public opinion is rapidly changing from blind partisanship to broad and common sense views o public affairs ano or what is mr the public good. I "aed l0 " T"'" 0t,llpr r' I m.ed 'JS 9' "' CTRTTS II. WALKER. j Patriotic Instructor of McPherson Post, No. h. G. A. R. Assails Britain's War Record. Reedville, Or., Sept. 20. To the Ed itor of The Journal What have the Fnclish done in this war? Nothing only what was generally accepted as a foregone conclusion resulting from the tremendous preponderance of the combined allied naval strength the driving of German vessels from the seas. Aside from this the English have done nothing but blunder. They failed to save Belgium, which they had sworn to protect, and had it not been for the valorous French army, the British would have long ago been swept into the sea. Lord Kitchener's spring drive met disaster at Neuve Chappelle, which, though heralded as a British victory, was In reality a humiliating defeat. They learned there that an army needed ammunl. PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL 'CHANGE Los Angeles Times: Has anybody here seen the Mpret of Albania? Omaha World Herald: Edison, one might say, is the leading light of the navy board. a Seattle Post Intelligencer: Still, there is some doubt about the czar's capability as a pinch-hitter. Boston Globe: .There's many a man who this week will make his wife a present of an aluminum preserving kettle. a Los Angeles Herald: Pessimist asks: "Is there any milk left in the pitcher?" Optimist asks: "Will you pass the cream?" Birmingham Age Herald: If the Balkan states get into the European war it may cut off the importation of wrestlers into America. Washington Post: Calling for Japan ese reinforcements suggests that there are occasions when the yellow peril looks like a rainbow of promise. Philadelphia North American: Rus sian cabinet has resigned, according to Petrograd dispatch. Next we will heart of the Holy Synod going on a strike. Seattle Times: The Sublime Porte must feel comfortable on reflecting that the situation in Turkey is critical. It was never anything else, within re cent memory. a a Philadelphia Ledger: On the day the czar took control the Russian press bureau announced a great victory. Which suggests that the czar took con trol of the press bureau. Kansas City Journal: The Knglish pound sterling has been steadily de preciating in value, measured in Amer ican money, but it has not reached the point where it looks like 30 cents. a Chicago Herald: Senator Lewis Is going abroad, Secretary- Lansing hautens to state, "on no official busi ness." The senator needs no official business to give importance to his person or impivssivenebs to his attire. The only objection any European coun try could have to receiving him would lie In the fact that his aspect and conversation might distract the coun try's attention too much from the war. THE BRITISH C. F. G. Masterman, in Contemporary Review. Pome are consciously fighting for England and the empire; some for what they believe to be a just cause, and some for hatred of Germany or in dignation nt German atrocity. There are those who desire to emulate their friends and those who desire their friends to be avenged. Home have en tered from vanity, some from cowar dice, others from courage or to es cape undesired employment, or from simple love of adventure, or because they must go when all are going, a a Po they pass, a piece of the life of F.ngland and these islands, to take their part in the great struggle, all unconscious that the universe in which they have lived and labored Is crash ing to pieces around them and that they are witnessing tiie end of a world. They w ill appear in history in the flare of that enormous sunset, cheesrful, resolute, unafraid. As they lived In field and forge, and factory, so they live in camp and fortress, so they face hardship and danger; so they die. a The bulk of them have always lived near "the margin" and therefore near the realities of life: in the face of dangers, ironworkers. ma nlpVilat irg molten metal, coal miners, exchanging only as one said explosion in the daylight for explosion in the dark; fishermen who have fought from child hood against the peril of the sea: or the poor whose mtnished and bleak days have only been rendered endur able by the simplicity, comradeship and perpetual chaff and humor which tlon, which they didn't have in suf ficient quantities, and besides this it leaked out that a considerable por tion of their ammunition was used against their own men as they were charging a Unman position. No doubt Lord Kitchener is as great as Wel lington was; yet Wellington had the Belgians and the Prussians undeir old Gcmral Bbnher helping him win the battle, of Waterloo. Knglish victories in the greatest part were won not by Knglish soldiers, but by soldiers of other nations. For instance, take the """""""H" 1""' war. we iina Prussians. Austrian. Danes and Dutch helping the Duke of Marlbor ough win the victories which made his name so famous and added un earned glory to British arms. In our French and Indian war "the Colonials did the fighting, while the English took the glory and the booty." The ramarlfhlA e n 1 TT1 hi i fi T Of T?llflvtAn - ; iun or snort Danot or any otner re- milltary power ls good evidence that form. Society In Its struggle to get someone ls asleep on the Job. That rld of the Ills that afflict it has someone ls Great Britain. 1 tried, and sometimes rejected, the O. E. FRANK. politico - monnrchlal. politico - repub- I llean. politico - demoeratic, politico - The Better Way With Convict. I democratic - republican and politico - Enterprise, Or., Sept. 18 To the 'commission frrms. and still her Editor of The Journal It appears that j f1' r"maln, ,AVh7 Because sRe . . , , has always retained the political Henry l ord has promised to employ j AV) n (i:r ronstltutlons the entire output of the Michigan penl-i arP ,i..,nn that the courts on ln tentiary. This is cheerful news, If quinntr !r,to them, discern the Indus true. This man, who ls rich not only t '-i.-i I form Instead of the political in dollars but in the affections of' form. so. lety's Ills will disappear, be people, has a theory that honest work. 'cause the source of her Ills will b reasonable hours, a fair wage and a '; removed. When the Invisible person sure living are as apt to reform me'- alitv called government In clean and as stripes, dungeons, black lists, ; it would be clean If it did not make rogues' galleries and Bertillon tncas-' exploitation legal the agents or of ui( merits. i fi'-ials would be clean (officially) re- Otven the raw material and the op- I gardless of whether they be saint or portunlty, along with Ford t reatment, j sinner. these so-called felons will be trans-j Tf Portland had Rn Industrio-com-formed i-nto useful citizens, as were mission form of city government In the early convict settlers of A u si ra 1 la. , stead of a politico-commission form PHILIP GRANPING. J think you the Ills of unemployment i and faulty distribution of wealth For the 'Industrial Commonwealth' j would long continue-' x0t likely, it Myrtle Creek, Or., Sept. 18. --To the , is at this point that present govern Editor of The Journal Your valliant , menls fail and cannot prevent fall approval of Hon. Klihu Roofs out- j ,lre- Until political forms are rejected burst against invisible government is j for Industrial forms there will slways funny, because there is no visible. D corruption In government, lollective government. Government, Mr. Root does not know much, or like God, though very powerful is I he was1 not taking himself seriously, invisible. Uncle Sam, Old Man Ore-j when he made that famous rpeech. INDEX OF ADVANCING t TIDE OF PROSPERITY , t The Iron -Age. In its weekly re- view of the iron and steel trade, a Bays: I "With steel making capacity so largely taken up for 1915. the trade is daily making calcula t tlons for the early months of I 1916. " There ls more evidence that the hand of the railroad is a being forced by the size of the foreign inquiry for steel to be t shinned after January 1. It looks J now a though the railroads will I all at once want a good many Jcarg t ajjd locomotives, and that i they will have to take their turn I 7 after buyers who have been more J forehanded. 4 "Locomotive orders and In- f i quirles have been larger in the 7 J past week than In months.' AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The second public drinking fountain hag been ordered by the Civic club, of Sheridan, and will soon be placed in position on Main street. Jefferson County Searchlight: Dr. B. K. Leach and wife, former editor and associate editor of the isearchlistil. left Monday tor California to visit friends and relatives, and also to look for a new location. a As proof of tha extreme salubrity prevailing at and about Joseph, the Herald avers that there has not been a death In that terrane for six month, and that "Undertaker Resch is begin ning to complain about his hard luck. a The Stanfield Standard has letlred from tho field of journulism as the Stanfield Standard. It will henceforth appear in larger form. In a new dress, and under the title the Orego.i Op timist. There Is to be no change of management. a a "Baker capitalists," advise?" the Democrat, "would do well to tut their money Into modern bungalows. The demand for this class of houses con tinues far in excess of the supply and it is probably conservative to say thai 50 more such dwellings could be rent ed in Baker today at monthly rentals from $20 to $30." m a Bend Bulletin: "How's business?" That was the banal question asked this week of more than a si ore of Bend merchants. It was at-ked in a cursory manner so that these merchants would not suspect that it was premeditated. To this interrogation came no hesitat ing replies. All grades up from "ood,' "looking up,'- "rushing" to "never bet ter." All were straight from the shoul der, and there were no reticent, un certain quibblings when spoken. a That east is east and coast 1s coast meteorologically is the contention of the Forest Grove News Times, which goes on to say: "Excellent rains vis ited this locality the past week. On Friday and Saturday the downpour was accompanied by considerable lightning and thunder, something un Ufuial for this community. In fact, it is very seldom that we have any thun der or lightning and when we have a little demonstration like that of last week that the average easterner would scarcely pause to listen to, the older Oregonlans in fright hunt for places t of safety." RECRUITS sweetens the common toll. "Times Is always slack six months after Christ mas and six months before; In he tween we're buss'," was the cheery comment of one who had gone to the front seeking "better times" In the stress and havoc of war. a a They will In one mood 1ng mourn ful hymns with great relish. In an other day they will march Into a burn ing city, with buildings crashing round them in fire and flame, to the cheeiful lilt of "Here we are again." 1 have heard them finding satisfaction in the drone of a dolorous chant, the first line three times repeated. In a cres cendo of gloom, "Yes, Kitehner loves me, the Bible tells me bo." I have heard them stepping out to the latest ragtime melody or the Inspiring ac cents of "Who's your lady friend?" Now grumbling, now applauding, with their own standards of excellence, In officers or leaders; one day deter mined to "chuck the whole thing up," the next day dying to a man rather than surrender, peaceable In the main, but roused to dreadful wrath by the death of comrades or by "unfair fight ing," they have been welded into that British infantry which has kept tho lino in France and Flanders, who-e battles will read In the record of the future as the record of gigantic, effort, of courage, endurance and pain. It is a "grand army" which will continue the work lt has begun until that work Is completed. It will never lack reso lution or reenforcement. For it is an army who can encounter death with laughter and go down singing Into si lence. gon end Miss Portland, though often expressing themselves through forms of law administered by their agents public officials are unseen mid in visible. Why darken council hy try ing to make believe there Is any real virtue in reform like a short ballot or any other political movement. Pol itics in government 1s like, salt In coffee makes it unfit and without remedy. j if tne proposed New Yorfc ron.M- , tution. because of a provision therein providing- for a department of lahor. industrial Zes the trnvernmenf Vew York will get rid of politics and will free herselr of the source of her cor ruption. The Invisible b-.dy which Mr. Root complains about is the quasi organized Interests made possible by the legal exploitation which politi cal forms of government make pos sible, and will continue regardless of 1 , . ' LaKeiy tne latter conclusion is cor rect. Yours for the Industrial common wealth, D. M. B ROWER, M. V. Self Defenae. Know thy Self: Against the world defend thy Self; Think nought "of death, in defense of thy Self. Put thy Self against the Wall, and none can harm thee. Place thy honor in thy Self, honor thy Self. And all of the world cannot dishonor thee. Pass through the flames of Hell, Strike to the right and to the left. Defend thy Self against a million foes, Before thy Self, all must be van quished and vanished. Self defense Is the first, last and only Law of the Holy Spirit. Defend thy Self, and thou can do no wrong: Self is thy Soul, and thy Soul la one with all. Oh, Brother! Know thy Self. Julian p. Scott, Dee, Oregon. OnceOver r rex LvMPr-uy LET US CONSIDER tho cane how lt IS CJltTioH Kv- VAPV nU and very young men and men wlJo wear wrist watches and suede gloves. and how nearly everyone comin buck from San KtHnclsco this sum mer is accompanied hy a ('una. J For Instance--look how the Fed- eral building has been J There's Willie Ma.-: C Si. Marshal who j i self and may take p day oane-lfled. -wain deputy; -t hates htm- isi n - aome because of his fatal beauty. H WiiMe came back w ith a cane. H And there's Bill Glover who knows en, uSri about counterfeiting to make all the money ho needs. and canes. Bill came back with two II And there's i,.c, s oren and Ears King who became mail clerks- A. B. Brown says- I a c Miev had no idea It was such hatd work. fl At least that's whv A. R. gave up his career as a Chautauqua lec turer to enter the postal service. J And Lars and Louis both came back with canes JAt least Andy Orr says they did. and Andy runs the elevator tn the Federal building an takes a personal Interest In everybody's business. J Anyway -Ihitt's what Ev John son umbrella fancier and assistant I. S. attorney says. and Ev wanted to get a cane at Pan Francisco but he was loaded down with umbrellas. JHe saw lois of canes he says that he could have got. J And Anderson M. Cannon who used to be clerk --of Hi Federal court cn,mtt bark with a big yellow "one with sliver mountings and grey left hand and his back. uede gloves In his hair combed straight two-story English cloth -and a hat. !T And he said this sort of stuff was all the thing down there. and swung his cane. And Charley Pray -the rellglotm detective icioked him ever and said: "Which so, t of stuff?" J But any wav Charley y An-dr-rson took hie, out and bought once --w! I bout urging- or mental sug gestion. - and this shows how powerfully Son Francisco nf feds some men. JAnd of course It may not be so -hut all lids me Ues ine think- of what Clarence Ki nines says about people 'who carry c.ine.v And Clarence n vs its n M rlrht if they're lanie in Ihe leg -but- LISTEN - -He has observed -as a general llni-g f they v, r. , i, t lama In one exttemlty -they w i In ihn other. I'nrle Jrff Snow Says: "When a man Is tiavciing your way there, is nothing In flinging rocks st him. and when he Is going the other way he soorf gets beyond rnni?e The man who can make friends with his one-time enemies get furlher with whatever he Is ddn than the chap that. ' ps bis grouch polished up bv tubbing and looking n t 4t" all the time." One Way Out. "Words are too feeble," says City Attorney" La Roche In striving, "on he half of the people of Portland, to thank Simon Ih-nson for his gift of Multnomah Fulls Indeed thev ate. That's one of their ancient weak ties; m. However, w.hen on find words to feeble, there is n neat wav nf getting around It. a Do as Mr. La Roche does If they're too feeble, just aay so, frankly. a a Which makes, them strong .enough for any purpose. Yes, Why Not? It's time for Portland papers to begin printing pictures of noble Nlmrods standing triumphant be side the dripping carcasses of deer. The next Lane county farmer who lays a hog for winter use should have himself photographed, hiucher knife In hand, and give the pic ture to the nearest Portland cor respondent. Why not?-Eugene ' Ouard. Nonchalant Stuff, Speaking of Jason Moore, the mod ern argonaut who proposes to wrest the golden fleece from Hie mliieral laden waters of Rummer and Abert lakes. In Lake county, the esteemed Oregonlan says that he Is n unlet, unassuming man of business-like de meanor. a This sounds good, but listen; "He doesn't bear the outward sp pe.arai.ce," continues his journalistic panegyrist, moter." "of a professional pro- By this, perhaps, we ere to infer that there is nothing of the W.illlng ford or Colonel "Be'llere in Mr.,Monr' modest make-up. a a There, I've said it. "Modest" la a good old word in emergencies of ids sort, Imt the Oregonlan forestall' d me. a a Which is to say. In vulgar modrrn ese, lt "beat me to It " Mr. Moore does not wear rnce tracfe clothes, oratorical so. ks nor stop-Iook-llsten neckties. "Contrarlwle," jibb.-,. the smazed matutinal contemn . ' i - messes plain ly and upeaks of hi' "eelf modestly." However, Mi Moore Is not alto gether a rara avis among promoters. a He Isn't entirely too good to be true, a a There's at least on redeeming touch of old-fashioned realism In the por trait that is limned on the mJnd's eye of the reader. For be "appears to have ' confidence In his project, and talks of spending $20,00,000 as nonchalantly a ..he r dlnary man does about buying; .a new hat or a cigar.'" a a Nonchalantly? Why not? ' a a - , Isn't lt Just as easy to talk non chalantly about spending $0,008,00 aa anyyother way? J a ,. I find it no. , .